I am increasingly finding passwords a pain, and I'm not convinced that they should always be necessary on a website.
However passwords are necessary to protect private data, and also for sites where financial transactions are involved.
Passwords, or perhaps the lack of knolwege of them, can present problems while travelling, and sometimes also afterwards.
Two examples:
1. Google - including gmail
Google tries to protect users by checking roughly where they are connecting from. If this seems unusual, such as in a different country, a request for one's explicit passord will be sent. This may not seem unreasonable, but many of us now store passwords in multiple mobile devices, computers etc. Some of us rely on the device for the password, a technique which can break down when away from home. In the case of Google it may be necessary to answer several questions and reset the password if it is to be used while away. This, inevitably, means that all the other computers using the same account will now have the wrong password. The effects of this can be long lasting, for example with email clients not picking up email, and it may be necessary to get all the devices in one location, reset the password one more time, then go through all the devices setting that new password.
Thus using one mobile device abroad without being explicitly aware of the password might force a need to reset and change the password on several (perhaps as many as 5 or even more) devices on one's return.
2. Amazon
Forgetting one's Amazon password can make it difficult to purchase new items, or to access the Amazon player. As with Google, the password can be reset, but this will again require reset on multiple machines on returning home. A decision might be needed regarding the balance of convenience in favour of resetting the password to enable purchases or to listen to Amazon player while away versus the knowledge that such a reset will require further action on other machines later.
Spotify and other sites are sometimes also similar.
For security reasons I do not carry all my passwords with me, or have them stored in files on my computers, so if a device "forgets" a password this can have upsetting consequences while travelling, and sometimes the later effects can persist for a long time, particularly as many sites are linked and some sites get taken over by new owners.
Sometimes a program or app will "forget" passwords if there is a change in the system, or a system update, which also adds to the problems, and can be very disruptive.
However passwords are necessary to protect private data, and also for sites where financial transactions are involved.
Passwords, or perhaps the lack of knolwege of them, can present problems while travelling, and sometimes also afterwards.
Two examples:
1. Google - including gmail
Google tries to protect users by checking roughly where they are connecting from. If this seems unusual, such as in a different country, a request for one's explicit passord will be sent. This may not seem unreasonable, but many of us now store passwords in multiple mobile devices, computers etc. Some of us rely on the device for the password, a technique which can break down when away from home. In the case of Google it may be necessary to answer several questions and reset the password if it is to be used while away. This, inevitably, means that all the other computers using the same account will now have the wrong password. The effects of this can be long lasting, for example with email clients not picking up email, and it may be necessary to get all the devices in one location, reset the password one more time, then go through all the devices setting that new password.
Thus using one mobile device abroad without being explicitly aware of the password might force a need to reset and change the password on several (perhaps as many as 5 or even more) devices on one's return.
2. Amazon
Forgetting one's Amazon password can make it difficult to purchase new items, or to access the Amazon player. As with Google, the password can be reset, but this will again require reset on multiple machines on returning home. A decision might be needed regarding the balance of convenience in favour of resetting the password to enable purchases or to listen to Amazon player while away versus the knowledge that such a reset will require further action on other machines later.
Spotify and other sites are sometimes also similar.
For security reasons I do not carry all my passwords with me, or have them stored in files on my computers, so if a device "forgets" a password this can have upsetting consequences while travelling, and sometimes the later effects can persist for a long time, particularly as many sites are linked and some sites get taken over by new owners.
Sometimes a program or app will "forget" passwords if there is a change in the system, or a system update, which also adds to the problems, and can be very disruptive.
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